06.09.23 Castell Dolforwyn (SO 151 950)
Castell Dolforwyn (SO 151 950) |
Castell Dolforwyn sits
atop a hill that from the near main road is shrouded by trees. I had only visited once before; in February
2004 when combining this hill with a number of other P30s to its north-west. Other than prior knowledge of its position
and/or the small signpost pointing toward it from the road to its east, it
would be all too easy not to know that one of Wales’ most important ancient
castles is positioned near-by.
Text from the information board at the small car park |
The castle was built in
1273 by Llywelyn ap Gruffydd on the Welsh side of the Afon Hafren (River
Severn), with the castle at Montgomery only a few miles away on the English
side of the river and very much a part of the lordships associated with the
English crown.
The information board beside the narrow lane leading to the small car park |
Its occupation by Llywelyn was short lived as defiance toward the English crown resulted in a siege and following surrender of the castle in 1277. It was then occupied and reinforced by Marcher Lord Roger Mortimer, before falling in to disrepair and abandonment in the 14th century. Today its remains are evocative, standing as one of the last vestiges of Welsh Princedom in this part of the country.
A brief history of the castle |
With business to attend
to in Newtown and the prospect of a forested top to visit this upcoming
Saturday, and the forecast for warm conditions I thought a small walk to a
single hill on my way home to Welshpool was in order, and Castell Dolforwyn
ticked all boxes.
I pulled up at the small
parking area to the east of the summit and was walking by 10.15am. The path from this direction leads through a
gate and then steeply up a track with embedded stone giving grip for vehicle
access to Yewtree Cottage, which could be seen clinging to the hillside from
the car park below.
One of many butterflies flitting about in the morning's sun |
The hedgerows were awash
in greenery with a myriad of butterflies flitting about in the morning sun. The track veered leftward and then gradually gained
height until beside the cottage, from here a gate accesses the upper track
which eventually leads to the remains of the castle.
The track leading to the castle |
The sky was ablaze with
blue as I approached the stone work of the exterior walls, it was already warm and
I was glad that the uphill was now over with.
Prior to the visit I had used LIDAR to determine the height and position
of the summit and its connecting bwlch and had come prepared with the relevant ten
figure grid references.
LIDAR gives two high
points 1.1cm apart in height. The first
one that I approached looked higher.
However, it is reported that the upper hill was levelled to accommodate
the building of the castle, so any semblance of a natural high point is only
what remains today. Before positioning
the Trimble to gather its first data set I wandered parts of the castle and
looked back toward the spot the Trimble was now placed upon, and it was soon
set to gather its allotted data.
Gathering data at the summit of Castell Dolforwyn |
This high point matched
the LIDAR co-ordinates for the summit.
As the Trimble quietly beeped away gathering its all-important summit
data I sat on one of the stone walls and waited for the five minutes of data to
be stored.
Once data were gathered
and stored I closed the equipment down and immediately activated it again as I
headed toward the second LIDAR top, this proved to be on a gravelled section at
the north-easterly part of the castle, I quickly dismissed this as unnatural
and backtracked to a slight grassy rise between the two points.
LIDAR summit image of Castell Dolforwyn |
This second position is
given lower by LIDAR, but now here I wanted a comparison of Trimble data with
the gravelled section dismissed as a recent man-made construct. During data collection the castle surrounds remained
quiet, with only the occasional sound of a bird and the tree scampering of a
squirrel.
Gathering data at the second point surveyed with the Trimble GeoXH 6000 |
Once the equipment was
packed away I wandered around the castle, reading the various information
boards as I did so. Leaving the inner castle
I then walked the perimeter of the exterior walls at their immediate base. This gave a good and different perspective to
the castle and I would recommend doing this to any visitor.
Part of the exterior wall |
An information board in the interior of the castle |
The south-west corner of the castle |
By the time I left and
headed back down the rack it was getting increasing warmer, but I was in no
rush and the going was easy. Back at my
car I talked with a Dutch couple who were touring Wales for the week. We chatted for ten minutes or more before
they set off up the steep track toward the castle; I recommended taking lots of
water as it was now decidedly hot.
Survey Result:
Castell
Dolforwyn (significant name change)
Summit Height: 228.5m (Trimble GeoXH
6000) (significant height revision)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 15189 95016 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Bwlch Height: 188.1m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SO 14988 95278 (LIDAR)
Drop: 40.4m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Dominance: 17.68% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
For further details please consult the Trimble Survey Spreadsheet
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